How Micro-Moments Are Changing the Rules

How Micro-Moments Are Changing the Rules

Consumer behavior has changed forever. Today's battle for hearts, minds, and
dollars is won (or lost) in micro-moments—intent-driven moments of decision-making
and preference-shaping that occur throughout the entire consumer journey. Read more
about this new mental model for marketing.

Put Google research and insight behind your thinking

As mobile has become an indispensable part of our daily lives, we're witnessing a
fundamental change in the way people consume media. What used to be our
predictable, daily sessions online have been replaced by many fragmented
interactions that now occur instantaneously. There are hundreds of these moments
every day—checking the time, texting a spouse, chatting with friends on social
media.

But then there are the other moments—the I want-to-know moments, I want-to-go
moments, I want-to-do moments, and I want-to-buy moments—that really matter. We
call these "micro-moments," and they're game changers
for both consumers and brands.

[[callout-headline-1]]

Micro-moments occur when people reflexively turn to a device—increasingly a
smartphone—to act on a need to learn something, do something, discover something,
watch something, or buy something. They are intent-rich moments when decisions are
made and preferences shaped. In these moments, consumers' expectations are higher
than ever. The powerful computers we carry in our pockets have trained us to expect
brands to immediately deliver exactly what we are looking for when we are looking.
We want things right, and we want things right away.

Consider these findings from some recent research we conducted:

•Of leisure travelers who are smartphone users, 69% search
for travel ideas during spare moments, like when they're standing in line or
waiting for the subway. Nearly half of those travelers go on to book their choices
through an entirely separate channel.1

•Of smartphone users, 91% look up information on their
smartphones while in the middle of a task. 2

•Of smartphone users, 82% consult their phones while
they're standing in a store deciding which product to buy. One in 10 of those end
up buying a different product than they had planned. 2

•Of online consumers, 69% agree that the quality, timing,
or relevance of a company's message influences their perception of a brand.
2

The successful brands of tomorrow will be those that have a strategy for
understanding and meeting consumers' needs in these micro-moments.